cosmos.wikisort.org - SpacecraftThe Eddington mission was a European Space Agency (ESA) project that planned to search for Earth-like planets, but was cancelled in 2003.[1] It was named for the noted astronomer Arthur Eddington, who formulated much of the modern theory of stellar atmospheres and stellar structure, popularized Albert Einstein's work in the English language, carried out the first test (gravitational lensing) of the general theory of relativity, and made original contributions to the theory.[2] It was originally planned for operation in 2008, but was delayed. The ESA website now records its status as cancelled.[3]
Overview
Using a single spacecraft in Earth orbit equipped with four telescopes, Eddington was to examine different regions of the sky for intervals of about two months each[citation needed]. The telescope would observe more than 500 000 stars for a possible transitions and collect asteroseismic data for 50 000 stars in a high temporal resolution.[3]
The mission was then planned to search for Earth-like planets orbiting other stars, pointing continuously at one region of the sky for three years. It would measure light from more than 100,000 stars and detect the tiny decrease in light as a planet passes in front of a star.[4]
Eddington was advocated as the culmination of an international attempt to perform asteroseismology from space. Two small precursor space missions have taken place. The French COROT mission (2006-2014) searched for other planets. Microvariability and Oscillations of STars (MOST, 2003-2019) was a Canadian mission using a 15 cm telescope.[3]
Planned launch
The launch vehicle was to have been a Soyuz-Fregat rocket from the Baikonur Cosmodrome. It was to have travelled beyond the Moon to the L2 Lagrangian point. It would have stayed there for the planned 5-year mission length. The launch mass was planned at 1640 kg.
Eddington was to be a European counterpart to Kepler, expecting to detect thousands of planets of any size and a few tens of terrestrial planets that are potentially habitable.[5] Budget overruns with other ESA missions led to the cancellation of the mission in November 2003,[6] despite strong protests from the scientific community.[7]
See also
References
External links
Space observatories |
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Operating | |
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Planned |
- iWF-MAXI (2021)
- Astro-1 Telescope (2021)
- Nano-JASMINE (2021)
- ORBIS (2021)
- ILO-X (2022)
- PETREL (2022)
- Space Solar Telescope (2022)
- XPoSat (2022)
- XRISM (2022)
- Euclid (2023)
- K-EUSO (2023)
- SVOM (2023)
- LORD (2024)
- SPHEREx (2024)
- Xuntian (2024)
- COSI (2025)
- Spektr-UV (2025)
- Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope (2025+)
- NEO Surveyor (2026)
- PLATO (2026)
- Solar-C EUVST (2026)
- JASMINE (2028)
- LiteBIRD (2028)
- ARIEL (2029)
- Spektr-M (2030+)
- Athena (2035)
- LISA (2037)
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Proposed |
- Arcus
- AstroSat-2
- EXCEDE
- Fresnel Imager
- FOCAL
- HabEx
- Hypertelescope
- ILO-1
- JEM-EUSO
- LUCI
- LUVOIR
- Lynx
- Nautilus Deep Space Observatory
- New Worlds Mission
- NRO donation to NASA
- OST
- PhoENiX
- Solar-D
- THEIA
- THESEUS
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Retired | |
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Hibernating (Mission completed) | |
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Lost/Failed | |
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Cancelled | |
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Related |
- Great Observatories program
- List of space telescopes
- List of proposed space observatories
- List of X-ray space telescopes
- List of planetariums
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Category:Space telescopes
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European Space Agency |
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Spaceports |
- Guiana Space Centre
- Esrange
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Launch vehicles |
- Ariane 5
- Ariane 6
- Soyuz
- Vega
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Facilities |
- Space Operations Centre
- Space Research and Technology Centre
- ESA Centre for Earth Observation
- European Astronaut Centre
- Space Astronomy Centre
- Space Applications and Telecommunications Centre
- Concurrent Design Facility
- Space Telescope European Coordinating Facility
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Communications |
- ESTRACK
- European Data Relay System
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Programmes |
- Artemis
- Aurora
- ATV
- Copernicus
- Columbus
- CryoSat
- EGNOS
- GALILEO
- ELIPS
- ExoMars
- FLPP
- Living Planet Programme
- Space Situational Awareness Programme
- Science Programme
- Horizon 2000
- Cosmic Vision
- Pride
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Predecessors |
- European Launcher Development Organisation
- European Space Research Organisation
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Related topics |
- Arianespace
- ESA Television
- EUMETSAT
- European Space Camp
- GEWEX
- Planetary Science Archive
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Projects and missions |
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Science | Solar physics |
- ISEE-2 (1977–87)
- Ulysses (1990–2009)
- SOHO (1995–present)
- Cluster II (2000–present)
- Solar Orbiter (2020–present)
- Vigil (2020s)
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Planetary science |
- Giotto (1985–92)
- Huygens (1997–2005)
- SMART-1 (2003–06)
- Mars Express (2003–present)
- Rosetta/Philae (2004–16)
- Venus Express (2005–14)
- ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter (2016–present)
- BepiColombo (2018–present)
- Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer (2023)
- Hera (2024)
- Rosalind Franklin rover (2028)
- Comet Interceptor (2029)
- EnVision (2031)
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Astronomy and cosmology | |
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Earth observation |
- Copernicus (1988–present)
- Meteosat First Generation (1977–97)
- ERS-1 (1991–2000)
- ERS-2 (1995–2011)
- Meteosat Second Generation (2002–present)
- Envisat (2002–12)
- Double Star (2003–07)
- MetOp (2006–present)
- GOCE (2009–13)
- SMOS (2009–present)
- CryoSat-2 (2010–present)
- Swarm (2013–present)
- Sentinel-1 / 1A / 1B (2014–present)
- Sentinel-2 / 2A / 2B (2015–present)
- Sentinel-3 / 3A / 3B (2016–present)
- Sentinel-5 Precursor (2017–present)
- ADM-Aeolus (2018–present)
- Biomass (2023)
- EarthCARE (2023)
- Meteosat Third Generation (Sentinel-4) (2023)
- MetOp-SG-A (2024)
- SMILE (2024)
- ALTIUS (2025)
- FLEX (2025)
- MetOp-SG-B (2025)
- FORUM (2026)
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ISS spaceflight | |
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Telecommunications |
- GEOS 2 (1978)
- Olympus-1 (1989–93)
- Artemis (2001–present)
- GIOVE-A (2005–present)
- GIOVE-B (2008–present)
- HYLAS-1 (2010–present)
- Galileo IOV (2011–present)
- Galileo FOC (2014–present)
- EGNOS
- European Data Relay System (2016–present)
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Technology demonstrators | |
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Cancelled and proposed | |
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Failed | |
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Future missions in italics
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Ground-based | | |
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Space missions | Past |
- MOST (2003–2019)
- SWEEPS using HST (2006)
- CoRoT (2006–2013)
- EPOXI using Deep Impact (2008–2013)
- Kepler (2009–2018)
- ASTERIA (2017–2020)
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Current |
- Gaia (2013–present)
- TESS (2018–present)
- CHEOPS (2019–present)
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Planned | |
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Proposed |
- EXCEDE
- HabEx
- LIFE
- LUVOIR
- Nautilus Deep Space Observatory
- New Worlds Mission
- OST
- PEGASE
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Cancelled | |
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Related | |
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